Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    1/22

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    2/22

    Kate DiCamillo

    R a y m i e

     N i g h t i n g a l e

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    3/22

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents

    are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, are used

    fictitiously. All statements, activities, stunts, descriptions, information

    and material of any other kind contained herein are included for

    entertainment purposes only and should not be relied on for

    accuracy or replicated, as they may result in injury.

    First published in Great Britain 2016 by Walker Books Ltd

    87 Vauxhall Walk, London SE11 5HJ

    2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

    Text © 2016 Kate DiCamillo

     Jacket illustration © 2016 Lucy Davey

    The right of Kate DiCamillo to be identified as author of thiswork has been asserted by her in accordance with the

    Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

    This book has been typeset in Joanna MT

    Printed in Denmark by Norhaven

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced,

    transmitted or stored in an information retrieval system in any

    form or by any means, graphic, electronic or mechanical,

    including photocopying, taping and recording, without prior

    written permission from the publisher.

    British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data:

    a catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

    ISBN 978-1-4063-6313-5

    www.walker.co.uk

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    4/22

    For my rancheros … thank you

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    5/22

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    6/22

    8

    She herself often felt too terrified to go on, but

    she had never admitted it out loud.The girl in the pink dress moaned and toppled

    over sideways.

    Her eyes fluttered closed. She was silent. And

    then she opened her eyes very wide and shouted,

    “Archie, I’m sorry! I’m sorry I betrayed you!”

    She closed her eyes again. Her mouth fell open.

    Raymie had never seen or heard anything

    like it.

    “I’m sorry,” Raymie whispered. “I betrayed

    you.”

    For some reason, the words seemed worthrepeating.

    “Stop this nonsense immediately,” said Ida

    Nee.

    Ida Nee was the baton-twirling instructor.

    Even though she was old – fifty at least – her hair

    was an extremely bright yellow. She wore white

    boots that came all the way up to her knees.

    “I’m not kidding,” said Ida Nee.

    Raymie believed her.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    7/22

     9

    Ida Nee didn’t seem like much of a kidder.

    The sun was way, way up in the sky, and thewhole thing was like high noon in a Western. But

    it was not a Western; it was baton-twirling lessons

    at Ida Nee’s house in Ida Nee’s backyard.

    It was the summer of 1975.

    It was the fifth day of June.

    And two days before, on the third day of June,

    Raymie Clarke’s father had run away with a woman

    who was a dental hygienist.

    Hey, diddle, diddle, the dish ran away with the spoon.

    Those were the words that went through

    Raymie’s head every time she thought about herfather and the dental hygienist.

    But she did not say the words out loud any

    more because Raymie’s mother was very upset,

    and talking about dishes and spoons running away

    together was not appropriate.

    It was actually a great tragedy, what had

    happened.

    That was what Raymie’s mother said.

    “This is a great tragedy,” said Raymie’s mother.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    8/22

    “Quit reciting nursery rhymes.”

    It was a great tragedy because Raymie’s fatherhad disgraced himself.

    It was also a great tragedy because Raymie was

    now fatherless.

    The thought of that – the fact of it – that she,

    Raymie Clarke, was without a father, made a small,

    sharp pain shoot through Raymie’s heart every

    time she considered it.

    Sometimes the pain in her heart made her feel

    too terrified to go on. Sometimes it made her want

    to drop to her knees.

    But then she would remember that she had aplan.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    9/22

     11

    Two

    “Get up,” said Ida Nee to the girl in the pink dress.

    “She fainted,” said the other baton-twirlingstudent, a girl named Beverly Tapinski, whose

    father was a cop.

    Raymie knew the girl’s name and what her

    father did because Beverly had made an announce-

    ment at the beginning of the lesson. She had stared

    straight ahead, not looking at anybody in particu-

    lar, and said, “My name is Beverly Tapinski and my

    father is a cop, so I don’t think you should mess

    with me.”

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    10/22

    12

    Raymie, for one, had no intention of messing

    with her.“I’ve seen a lot of people faint,” said Beverly

    now. “That’s what happens when you’re the daugh-

    ter of a cop. You see everything. You see it all.”

    “Shut up, Tapinski,” said Ida Nee.

    The sun was very high in the sky.

    It hadn’t moved.

    It seemed like someone had stuck it up there

    and then walked away and left it.

    “I’m sorry,” whispered Raymie. “I betrayed

    you.”

    Beverly Tapinski knelt down and put her handson either side of the fainting girl’s face.

    “What do you think you’re doing?” said Ida

    Nee.

    The pine trees above them swayed back and

    forth. The lake, Lake Clara – where someone

    named Clara Wingtip had managed to drown her-

    self a hundred years ago – gleamed and glittered.

    The lake looked hungry.

    Maybe it was hoping for another Clara Wingtip.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    11/22

    Raymie felt a wave of despair.

    There wasn’t time for people fainting. She hadto learn how to twirl a baton and she had to learn

    fast, because if she learnt how to twirl a baton,

    she stood a good chance of becoming Little Miss

    Central Florida Tire.

    And if she became Little Miss Central Florida

    Tire, her father would see her picture in the paper

    and come home.

    That was Raymie’s plan.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    12/22

    14

    T h r e e

    The way that Raymie imagined her plan unfold-

    ing was that her father would be sitting in somerestaurant, in whatever town he had run away to.

    He would be with Lee Ann Dickerson, the dental

    hygienist. They would be sitting together in a

    booth, and her father would be smoking a cigar-

    ette and drinking coffee, and Lee Ann would be

    doing something stupid and inappropriate, like

    maybe filing her nails (which you should never do

    in public). At some point, Raymie’s father would

    put out his cigarette and open the paper and clear

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    13/22

    his throat and say, “Let’s see what we can see here,”

    and what he would see would be Raymie’s picture.He would see his daughter with a crown on

    her head and a bouquet of flowers in her arms and

    a sash across her chest that said LITTLE MISS CENTRAL

    FLORIDA TIRE 1975.

    And Raymie’s father, Jim Clarke of Clarke

    Family Insurance, would turn to Lee Ann and say,

    “I must return home immediately. Everything has

    changed. My daughter is now famous. She has

    been crowned Little Miss Central Florida Tire.”

    Lee Ann would stop filing her nails. She would

    gasp out loud in surprise and dismay (and also,maybe, in envy and admiration).

    That’s the way Raymie imagined it would

    happen.

    Probably. Maybe. Hopefully.

    But first she needed to learn how to twirl a

    baton.

    Or so said Mrs Sylvester.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    14/22

    16

    Four  

    Mrs Sylvester was the secretary at Clarke FamilyInsurance.

    Mrs Sylvester’s voice was very high-pitched.

    She sounded like a little cartoon bird when she

    talked, and this made everything that she said

    seem ridiculous but also possible – both things at

    the same time.

    When Raymie had told Mrs Sylvester that she

    was going to enter the Little Miss Central Florida

    Tire contest, Mrs Sylvester had clapped her hands

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    15/22

     17

    together and said, “What a wonderful idea. Have

    some candy corn.”Mrs Sylvester kept an extremely large jar of

    candy corn on her desk at all times and in all sea-

    sons, because she believed in feeding people.

    She also believed in feeding swans. Every day

    on her lunch break, Mrs Sylvester took a bag of

    swan food and went down to the pond by the

    hospital.

    Mrs Sylvester was very short, and the swans

    were tall and long-necked. When Mrs Sylvester

    stood in the middle of them with her scarf on her

    head and the big bag of swan food in her arms,she looked like something out of a fairy tale.

    Raymie wasn’t sure which fairy tale.

    Maybe it was a fairy tale that hadn’t been told

    yet.

    When Raymie had asked Mrs Sylvester what

    she thought about Jim Clarke running away with

    a dental hygienist, Mrs Sylvester had said, “Well,

    dear, I have found that most things work out right

    in the end.”

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    16/22

    Did most things work out right in the end?

    Raymie wasn’t sure.The idea seemed ridiculous (but also possible)

    when Mrs Sylvester said it in her tiny bird voice.

    “If you intend to win the Little Miss Central

    Florida Tire contest,” said Mrs Sylvester, “you must

    learn how to twirl a baton. And the best person to

    teach you how to twirl a baton is Ida Nee. She is a

    world champion.”

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    17/22

     19

    F i ve

    This explained what Raymie was doing in Ida

    Nee’s backyard, under Ida Nee’s pine trees.She was learning how to twirl a baton.

    Or that was what she was supposed to be

    doing.

    But then the girl in the pink dress fainted, and

    the twirling lesson came to a screeching halt.

    Ida Nee said, “This is ridiculous. No one faints

    in my classes. I don’t believe in fainting.”

    Fainting didn’t seem like the kind of thing that

    you needed to believe in (or not) in order for it

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    18/22

    20

    to happen, but Ida Nee was a world-champion

    twirler and she probably knew what she was talk-ing about.

    “It is just nonsense,” said Ida Nee. “I don’t

    have time for nonsense.”

    This pronouncement was greeted with a small

    silence, and then Beverly Tapinski slapped the girl

    in the pink dress.

    She slapped one cheek and then the other one.

    “What in the world?” said Ida Nee.

    “This is what you do for people who faint,”

    said Beverly. “You slap them.” She slapped the girl

    again. “Wake up!” she shouted.The girl opened her eyes. “Uh-oh,” she said.

    “Has the county home come? Is Marsha Jean here?”

    “I don’t know any Marsha Jean,” said Beverly.

    “You fainted.”

    “Did I?” She blinked. “I have very swampy

    lungs.”

    “This lesson is over,” said Ida Nee. “I’m not

    wasting my time with idlers and malin gerers. Or

    fainters.”

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    19/22

     21

    “Good,” said Beverly. “No one wants to learn

    how to twirl a stupid baton anyway.”Which was not true.

    Raymie wanted to learn.

    In fact, she needed to learn.

    But it didn’t seem like a good idea to disagree

    with Beverly.

    Ida Nee marched away from them, down to

    the lake. She lifted her white- booted legs very

    high. You could tell that she was a world cham-

    pion just by watching her march.

    “Sit up,” said Beverly to the fainting girl.

    The girl sat up. She looked around her inwonder, as if she had been deposited on Ida Nee’s

    property by mistake. She blinked. She put her hand

    on her head. “My brain feels light as a feather,”

    she said.

    “Duh,” said Beverly. “That’s because you

    fainted.”

    “I’m afraid that I wouldn’t have made a very

    good Flying Elefante,” said the girl.

    There was a long silence.

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    20/22

    22

    “What’s an elefante?” asked Raymie finally.

    The girl blinked. Her blonde hair shone whitein the sun. “I’m an Elefante. My name is Louisiana

    Elefante. My parents were the Flying Elefantes.

    Haven’t you heard of them?”

    “No,” said Beverly. “We haven’t heard of them.

    You should try to stand up now.”

    Louisiana put her hand on her chest. She took

    a deep breath. She wheezed.

    Beverly rolled her eyes. “Here,” she said. She

    held out her hand. It was a grubby hand. The fin-

    gers were smudged, and the nails were dirty and

    chewed down. But in spite of its grubbiness, ormaybe because of it, it was a very certain-looking

    hand.

    Louisiana took hold of it, and Beverly pulled

    her to her feet.

    “Oh my goodness,” said Louisiana. “I’m just

    all filled up with feathers and regrets. And fears.

    I have a lot of fears.”

    She stood there staring at both of them. Her

    eyes were dark. They were brown. No, they were

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    21/22

     23

    black, and they were set very deep in her face. She

    blinked.“I’ve got a question for you,” she said. “Have

    you ever in your life come to realize that every-

    thing, absolutely everything, depends on you?”

    Raymie didn’t even have to think about the

    answer to this question. “Yes,” she said.

    “Duh,” said Beverly.

    “It’s terrifying, isn’t it?” said Louisiana.

    The three of them stood there looking at one

    another.

    Raymie felt something expanding inside her.

    It felt like a gigantic tent billowing out.This, Raymie knew, was her soul.

    Mrs Borkowski, who lived across the street from

    Raymie and who was very, very old, said that most

    people wasted their souls.

    “How do they waste them?” Raymie had

    asked.

    “They let them shrivel,” said Mrs Borkowski.

    “Phhhhtttt.”

  • 8/18/2019 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo sampler

    22/22

    Which was maybe – Raymie wasn’t sure – the

    sound a soul made when it shrivelled.But as Raymie stood in Ida Nee’s backyard next

    to Louisiana and Beverly, it did not feel like her

    soul was shrivelling at all.

    It felt like it was filling up – becoming larger,

    brighter, more certain.

    Down at the lake, on the edge of the dock, Ida

    Nee was twirling her baton. It flashed and glim-

    mered. She threw it very high in the air.

    The baton looked like a needle.

    It looked like a secret, narrow and bright and

    alone, glittering in the blue sky.Raymie remembered the words from earlier:

    I’m sorry I betrayed you.

    She turned to Louisiana and asked, “Who is

    Archie?”

    http://bit.ly/1SyhYoe